MANSTON, England (AP) -
Adventurer Steve Fossett completed the longest nonstop flight in aviation
history Saturday after journeying around the globe - and then some - in about
80 hours.
Ground control said
Fossett, 61, broke the airplane distance record of 24,987 miles while his
lightweight experimental plane was flying over Shannon, Ireland.
He is expected to complete
his epic voyage just after noon EST when he lands at a British military air
strip in Kent, southern England.
The
millionaire adventurer broke the record during 3 1/2 days of flying despite
losing about 750 pounds of fuel during takeoff from the Kennedy Space Center in Florida because of a leak.
Weak winds over the
Atlantic and severe turbulence over India - which, at one point, forced Fossett
to strap on a parachute - prompted fears Fossett would have to ditch his
record-breaking attempt in Newfoundland.
Instead, his flight team
altered his projected route, having Fossett cross Florida, where he had begun
his nonstop journey Wednesday, and take a southerly path on the flight's last
leg to take advantage of better winds.
Early Saturday, Fossett
decided to try to finish the trip after reaching the middle of the Atlantic.
His voyage broke the
airplane distance record of 24,987 miles set in 1986 by the lightweight Voyager
aircraft piloted by Dick Rutan and Jeana Yeager, as well as the balloon record
of 25,361 miles set by Brian Jones and Bertrand Piccard in 1999.
Associated Press
reporter Mike Schneider in Cape Canaveral, Fla., contributed to this report.